Featured

Spain’s immigration reform offers hope to asylum seekers and workers without papers

Don’t miss the full story, whose reporting from Renata Brito at The Associated Press is the basis of this artificial intelligence-assisted article.

Spain announced it will grant residency and work permits to immigrants who arrived before Dec. 31, 2025, have lived in the country for at least five months and have no criminal record, offering legal status to hundreds of thousands of undocumented workers who have been filling essential jobs in the Spanish economy.

Some key facts:

• More than half a million immigrants are believed to live in Spain without legal permission, working jobs that few Spaniards want, such as picking fruits and vegetables, caring for children and the elderly, and cleaning homes and hotel rooms.

• Spain’s socialist prime minister, Pedro Sanchez, announced the policy would grant residency and work permits to all foreigners who arrived before Dec. 31, 2025, have lived in Spain for at least five months and have no criminal record.

• The application window for the new residency permits will run from April through the end of June only, requiring applicants to gather necessary documents in a short timeframe.

• A record 97 million tourists visited Spain last year and spent more than 130 billion euros, with the booming tourism sector depending heavily on cheap and informal immigrant labor.

• Criminal groups are selling appointments at immigration offices for 50 euros because getting appointments through official channels has become nearly impossible.

• Latin Americans make up the majority of immigrants in Spain, with many arriving legally on tourist visas and deciding to stay.

• About 15,000 Pakistani citizens are living in Catalonia without permission, and the Pakistani consulate in Barcelona will open on weekends to help citizens obtain the required criminal record certificates.

• Spain’s Minister of Migration Elma Saiz vowed to dedicate additional resources to process hundreds of thousands of applications smoothly during the limited application period.

READ MORE: Spain gives hundreds of thousands of immigrants a way to stay legally. But who are they?


This article is written with the assistance of generative artificial intelligence based solely on Washington Times original reporting and wire services. For more information, please read our AI policy or contact Steve Fink, Director of Artificial Intelligence, at sfink@washingtontimes.com


The Washington Times AI Ethics Newsroom Committee can be reached at aispotlight@washingtontimes.com.

Source link

Related Posts

Load More Posts Loading...No More Posts.